<div dir="ltr"><div><span style="font-family:georgia,serif"><b>Akram Zaatari contextualises his work 'Nature morte'</b><br><br><a href="http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/akram-zaatari-fons/capsula">In this podcast, </a><b><a href="http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/akram-zaatari-fons/capsula">Akram Zaatari</a> </b>contextualises his work 'Nature morte',
which is part of the MACBA Collection. This film was produced for the
2008 exhibition 'Les Inquiets – 5 artistes sous la pression de la
guerre' at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, which explored the war
in the Middle East and its representations.<br><br>Link: <a href="http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/akram-zaatari-fons/capsula">http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/akram-zaatari-fons/capsula</a><br><br>The construction of memory, photographic objects, and a very broad
understanding of the notions of collectionism and archive have been at
the core of Akram Zaatari’s (Sidon, Lebanon, 1966) artistic practice
since 1995. In 1997, Zaatari co-founded the Arab Image Foundation (AIF)
partly to contain this activity of collecting, but also to organise it
within an institutional framework and give it form through an expanding
collection, which itself is a result of multiple modes of acquisition.
Less of a repository of documents, the strength and originality of the
AIF lies in the critical intersection of two archival practices,
institutional and artistic. Over the past twenty years, the AIF was the
medium through which many of Zaatari’s projects and interests were
developed. <br><br>Akram Zaatari is part of a generation of Lebanese
artists who, in recent decades, have focused their attention on armed
conflicts and post-war life in this Middle Eastern country. <br><br><a href="http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/akram-zaatari-fons/capsula">In FONS ÀUDIO #48, Akram Zaatari</a> contextualises his work 'Nature morte',
which is part of the MACBA Collection. This film was produced for the
2008 exhibition 'Les Inquiets – 5 artistes sous la pression de la
guerre' at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, which explored the war
in the Middle East and its representations. The video shows two men
seated in a drab, white-walled room. The older one, with a weathered
face, is preparing explosives, while the younger one mends a jacket. The
two men go about their business at the same time, without speaking. The
only sound that can be heard is the call to prayer from a nearby
mosque, the noises the men make as they work, and the hiss of a gas
lamp. When they have finished their tasks, the older man leaves the
house carrying a rifle on his back, a rucksack, his lunch in a plastic
bag, and the mended jacket. The camera shows him receding into the
distance at daybreak. The young man is played by the actor Ghayth el
Amine. The older one is Mohammad Abu Hammane, a former Lebanese
resistance fighter who had already worked with Zaatari in his 1997 video
'All is Well on the Border'. His participation in this new work brings
to mind the resistance years: an old man checks his fighting equipment.
The lack of dialogue emphasises the distance between two generations
that approach war in different ways. The scene was filmed in the village
of Hubbariyeh in the region of Aarqub in southern Lebanon, a
mountainous area at the intersection of Lebanon, Syria and Israel that
has been the object of political dispute for almost a century. The
village is located a stone’s throw from Shebaa farms, which have been
occupied by Israel since 1967 and are a centre for the Fedayeen
Palestinean resistance fighters.<br><br><b>Timeline</b><br><b>00:35</b> On 'Nature Morte' (2008)<br><b>01:15</b> The Shebaa Farms in between Lebanon and the Golan Heights<br><b>04:23</b> A film about military struggle, wether we continue or stop resisting occupation<br><b>06:54</b> Someone who lived under the Israeli occupation<br><b>09:47</b> It's about the division of Lebanese public opinion<br><b>10:09</b> A relationship between two men<br><b>11:03</b> No talking<br><b>11:18</b> Boyscouts, firemen and resistance fighters<br><b>12:00</b> The history of the Lebanon Republic stops with independence<br><b>12:50</b> Confronting the art public<br><br></span></div><span style="font-family:georgia,serif">Enjoy!<br></span></div>